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HUMAN

GEOGRAPHY

By Brett Lucas

INTRODUCTION

Overview

What is Geography?

Five “Key Spatial Themes”

Geography of Breakfast

Regions

Culture

Ptolemy’s First World Map, c. AD 150

What is Geography

What is Geography?

Geography is the

study of what is where

and why it’s there

Maps

What is Human Geography?

Human Geography

Population

Settlements

Economic Activities

Transportation

Recreational Activities

Religion

Language

Political Systems

Social Traditions

Human Migration Patterns

Agricultural Systems

Physical Geography

Rocks and Minerals

Landforms (geomorphology)

Soils

Animals/Plants (biogeography)

Water Resources

Atmosphere

Rivers and Other Water Bodies

Environment

Climate and Weather (climatology)

What is Human Geography?

Human geography - is the branch of geography

that focuses on the study of patterns and processes

that shape human interaction with the environment,

with particular reference to the causes and

consequences of the spatial distribution of human

activity on the Earth's surface

Fields of Human Geography

Cultural Geography - is the study of cultural

products and norms and their variation across and

relations to spaces and places.

Development Geography - is the study of the

Earth's geography with reference to the standard

of living and quality of life of its human inhabitants.

Economic Geography - is the study of the location,

distribution and spatial organization of economic

activities across the Earth.

Fields of Human Geography

Political Geography - is concerned with the study of

both the spatially uneven outcomes of political

processes and the ways in which political processes are

themselves affected by spatial structures.

Population Geography - is the study of the ways in

which spatial variations in the distribution, composition,

migration, and growth of populations are related to the

nature of places.

Urban Geography – is the study of urban areas, which

have a high concentration of buildings and

infrastructure

Five “Key Spatial Themes”

Five “Key Spatial Themes”

Location

Most geographic study begins with learning the

location of places

Absolute location – provides a definite reference

to locate a place

The reference can be latitude and longitude or a

street address

Relative location – describes a place with respect

to its environment and its connection to other places

Place

Place describes the human and physical

characteristics of a location

Physical characteristics – include a description

such things as the rivers & topography

Human characteristics – include the human-

designed cultural features of a place, from

land use and architecture to forms of

livelihood, to food and folk ways

Movement

Humans move, a lot

In addition, ideas, fads, goods, resources, and

communication all travel distances

This theme studies movement and migration

across the planet

Region

Region divides the world into manageable units

for geographic study, which usually have some

sort of characteristic that unifies the area

Regions can be formal, functional, or

vernacular.

Formal regions – are those that are designated by

official boundaries, such as cities, states, counties,

and countries.

For the most part, they are clearly indicated and

publicly known.

Region

Functional regions – are defined by their

connections. For example, the circulation area for a

major city area is the functional region of that

newspaper

Vernacular regions – are perceived regions, such

as "The South," "The Midwest," or the "Middle East;"

they have no formal boundaries but are understood

in our mental maps of the world

Interaction

This theme considers how humans adapt to and

modify the environment

Humans shape the landscape through their

interaction with the land; this has both positive

and negative effects on the environment

Geography of Breakfast

The Geography of Breakfast

A geographic thinking demonstration

Take a minute to write down everything ate for

breakfast or lunch today

Coffee

Top Ten Coffee Growing Countries shown in yellow

Chocolate

Chocolate was “discovered” for Europe by

Christopher Columbus, but it’s commercial

possibilities were recognized by Hernan Cortez who

was served a drink made from cocoa beans by

Moctezuma, leader of the Aztecs (whom he later

executed)

The cacao tree, like coffee, grows only in the tropics

Today it is grown primarily for export to the U.S.

and Europe.

Chocolate

Breakfast Foods

Food Place of Origin Current Production

Coffee Ethiopia Tropics

Oranges South Asia, India US, Mediterranean

Pork China, South Asia Worldwide

Wheat Near East US, Russia, Argentina

Tea China Asia

Oats Near East Temperate Climates

Pepper South America America, Asia

Regions

Rarotonga, Cook Islands

Mt. San Jacinto State Park, Idylwild, CA

Rocky Mountain National Park

Northern Baja Rest Stop

Manuel Antonio, Costa Rica

Milford Sound, New Zealand

Honolua Bay, Maui, Hawaiian Islands

Sugar Cane Field, Maui

Taos, New Mexico

Antelope Canyon, Navajo Nation

Virga, Colorado

Shanghai Smog, China

Summer Palace, Beijing, China

Key Concepts: Core-Periphery

Core

U.S., Europe, Japan,

Australia

Wealthy

Powerful

Controls Media and

Finance

Technologically

advanced

Periphery

Less Developed

Poor

Dependent upon

Core countries for:

Education

Technology

Media

Military Equipment

Globalization

The increasing interconnectedness of different parts of the world through common processes of economic, political, and cultural change

The economic, cultural, and environmental effects of globalization are highly contested

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